Victoria Kvitek
Singing How to Die: Mortuary Practices as Recorded in American Folk Music
Course: ANTH-B 400 Mortuary Practices, Prof. Cook
IU’s Anthropology department hosted a virtual graduation and award ceremony as Indiana University ceremonies were cancelled due to the COVID-19 crisis. We held our event online via Zoom on May 8th, 2020.
Singing How to Die: Mortuary Practices as Recorded in American Folk Music
Course: ANTH-B 400 Mortuary Practices, Prof. Cook
The Language of the Last Dynasty: Reassessing the Viability of Manchu Language Revitalization
Course: ANTH-L 400 Language Revitalization, Prof. Lesourd
Mariachi of the Midwest: Musical Expressions of Ethnic Belonging in the Heartland
Course: ANTH-E200 Introduction to Sociocultural Anthropology, Prof. Sterling
This competitive scholarship/grant opportunity (up to $1,000) supports on or off-campus research for undergraduate students pursuing majors in Anthropology.
Honors thesis research: Optimizing methods for facial symmetry and facial recognition in Howler Monkeys
Advisor: Prof. Wasserman
Lauren R. Schumacher*
Miriam E. Fakhouri
Chloe D. McCormick*
Madeline R. Everhart
Stuart Sones*
*attending
David Bidney Graduate Paper Prize
A prize of $200 awarded for the best paper written by a graduate student for a regular course during the previous calendar year.
On the Status of the Hadza Language and its Maintenance
Course: ANTH L600 Proseminar in Ethnography of Communication: Language Revitalization, Prof. Lesourd
Harold K. Schneider Graduate Paper Prize in Economic Anthropology
A prize of $200 awarded for the best paper in Economic Anthropology, broadly defined to include material culture, archaeology, and food studies, written by an anthropology graduate student during the previous calendar year.
Cultural Resource Management Project Design at the Intersection of Archaeological and Economic Interests
Course: A595 International Cultural Resource Management, Prof. Pyburn
Ryann Adam*
Emily Brandon
Ariel Creal*
Zayla Crocker
Kaeley Geschke*
Abigail Gornto
Jared Greenberg
Maclaren Guthrie
Coleton Hast (Honors)*
Greta Herbertz (Honors)*
Alexandra Jacobs (Honors )*
Lauren Janicki
*attending
Jacob Kraus
Victoria Kvitek (Honors)*
Lara Martinez
Chloe McCormick (PBK )*
Kristin Murray
David Randall
Alanna Robertson
Sara Schumacher*
Nora Smith
Abigail Thompson
Benjamin Turpin
Yuyang Ye
Click on individual PhD graduate video link to witness their advisors awarding them their degrees.
Communicative Practices and Social Integration: An Intergenerational Study of Women of Turkish Descent in Northeastern France (Graber & Suslak)
Tamil Traditions: Women Cooking and Eating for Heritage and Health in South India (Wilk)
The evolutionary role of dietary adaptations and their health outcomes among indigenous people of Chile (Wiley)
Reclaiming Detroit: Urban Blight & Contested Heritage on the Postindustrial Frontier (Pyburn)
Repatriating Ancient Biosamples: Understanding the Interplay between Tribal Knowledge, Anthropological Science, and NAGPRA (Kaestle)
(Re)Producing “Indian Food”: Race, Value, and Development in Peru’s Quinoa Boom-Bust (Brondizio & Wilk)
Up in Smoke: Tobacco Consumption in the Prehistoric American Midwest (Cook)
Romanian and Roma Migration to France after 1989: Citizenship, Precarity, and Hierarchies of Deservedness (Phillips)
Faithful/Traitor: Violence, Nationalism, and Performances of Druze Belonging (Gilley)
Choctaw Arts and the Meaning of Making (Jackson & Royce)
Birth in Post-apartheid South Africa: Care, Disease, Violence and Race (Goodman & Phillips)
Culture on Trial: Law, Custom, and Justice in a Taiwan Indigenous Court (Friedman)
Assembling Mississippian Communities: Integration, Identity, and Everyday Practices in the Angel Hinterlands (Alt)
This collection of screenshots were taken by Jason Baird Jackson during the Indiana University Department of Anthropology Graduation and Awards Celebration held online with Zoom on May 8, 2020 at 4 p.m. Department Chair Andrea Wiley hosted the event with assistance from various members of the faculty. The context of the event was the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused university celebrations and gatherings, including 2020 Spring Commencement, to be cancelled. Images are named by last name. Last names can be read against the PDF program for details on the accomplishments of the student (and faculty) participants. Not every awardee or participant was recorded in a screenshot, but the collection presents a sample of B.A., Ph.D. and faculty participants with an emphasis on honorees and those with speaking parts. Parents, friends, and family were also present. One distinctive characteristic of the event was the adaptation of commencement customs to the makeshift practices typical of the pandemic. Undergraduates wore various bits and pieces of cobbled together regalia, including (it appeared) high school caps and gowns. For the doctoral students, many were “hooded” with scarves and other hood-like garments by loved ones with whom they were quarantined. For the record, I note with appreciation the hard work of my colleagues (faculty and staff) in putting together a moving program, one that was well emceed by Professor Wiley. I believe that the proceedings were recorded by Professors Wiley and King and thus a video record may be available for preservation.
Some content on this page may not be viewable for those using assistive technologies. Please contact the department for assistance.